Abd el-Krim

Abd el-Krim, in full Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Karīm al-Khaṭṭābī, (born 1882, Ajdir, Morocco—died February 6, 1963, Cairo, Egypt), leader of the Berber forces during the Rif War (1921–26) against Spanish and French rule in North Africa and founder of the short-lived Republic of the Rif (1923–26). A skilled tactician and a capable organizer, he led a liberation movement that made him the hero of the Maghrib (northwest Africa).

Background

Abd el-Krim was born in the small settlement of Ajdir, across Alhucemas Bay from the Spanish army’s island presidio of Peñón de Alhucemas. Ajdir belonged to the Aït Youssef Ou Ali faction of the Beni Urriaguel family, the largest and most-populous Berber group in the Rif. Abd el-Krim’s father was a literate and learned man who had significant influence both within and outside his faction, and in the 1880s he was named a qāḍī (Islamic judge) by Moroccan Sultan Muley Hasan. As early as 1902, Abd el-Krim’s father was designated a moro amigo (“friendly Moor”) by Spanish military authorities, and he eventually received a monthly stipend for providing the Spanish with local intelligence and supporting their cause in the central Rif. That relationship would continue for a number of years, bringing benefits for his family but also the deep distrust of some of his fellow Berbers.

Abd el-Krim’s initial education was provided exclusively by his father; in 1902 he was sent to the traditional madrasah (university) of al-Qarawīyīn in Fès, where he studied Islamic law and classical Arabic grammar and literature for two years. In 1906, as a result of his father’s ties with the Spanish, he secured a teaching post at a Melillaprimary school for young Moroccan males, a position he would hold until 1913. Additionally, in 1907 he was hired to edit and write articles in Arabic for El Telegrama del Rif, a daily newspaper in Melilla. There he defended the advantages of European—especially Spanish—civilization and technology and their potential to elevate the economic and cultural level of the Moroccan population. His association with El Telegrama lasted until 1915. In 1910 Abd el-Krim took a position as secretary-interpreter in the Native Affairs Office in Melilla, which brought him into close contact with the Spanish military bureaucracy and the town’s civil society. In that post he gained a reputation for intelligence, efficiency, and discretion.

With the establishment of the Spanish protectorate in November 1912, Abd el-Krim’s fortunes improved appreciably. On the basis of his work in the Native Affairs Office he was named a qāḍī in July 1913, and the following October he was designated qāḍī al-quḍāt (chief Islamic judge) of Melilla. That position brought not only a great deal of responsibility and prestige but also the necessity of strictly adhering to Spanish policy. With the coming of World War I and Spain’s neutrality in the conflict, that adherence proved problematic. While still a paid Spanish agent, Abd el-Krim’s father surreptitiously supported German and Arab agents in the Rif. The Spanish authorities were well aware of those activities, because they were a violation of Spanish neutrality, and were concerned about the reaction of the French, who closely monitored those dealings.

In light of that, Abd el-Krim was interrogated in August 1915 concerning his father’s actions and his own views on the German cause. On the basis of that interview, a report was prepared by Spanish military authorities accusing Abd el-Krim of pro-Central Powerssentiments, of animosity toward the French, and of supporting an autonomous central Rif free of direct Spanish administration. That report led to two outcomes: Abd el-Krim’s incarceration from September 1915 to August 1916 in a Melilla prison, for pro-German and anti-Spanish sentiments, and the suspension of his father’s pension payments.

Abd el-Krim’s incarceration left a bitter legacy. Although he did return to his judgeship in May 1917, it was apparent that the Spanish were pressuring his father and him to desist from supporting the German cause and to back their “pacification” of the central Rif. That put Abd el-Krim’s family in an untenable position vis-à-vis their own people. In December 1918 Abd el-Krim abandoned his judgeship, called his brother, Muhammad, back from his studies in Madrid, and joined his father in Ajdir. By 1920 the family had definitively severed ties with the Spanish authorities and was actively organizing resistance to Spanish encroachments into the central Rif.

Abd el-Krim proved highly successful at organizing indigenous resistance to Spanish advances into the central Rif in June–August 1921, and those clashes marked the outbreak of the Rif War. The poorly organized, trained, supplied, and commanded Spanish conscript army under Gen. Manuel Fernández Silvestre was routed by Abd el-Krim’s fighters into an epic retreat from their encampment at Annoual (Anwal) on July 22, 1921. Between 8,000 and 10,000 Spanish troops were killed, a great deal of Spanish weaponry was abandoned, more than 300 prisoners were captured, and all the territory in the eastern part of the protectorate that Spain had occupied since 1909 was lost.

Abd el-Krim’s crushing defeat of the Spanish at Annoual catapulted him and his movement onto the international stage. He was seen as a heroic figure in the Islamic world and as an example of the courageous fighter standing against European colonialism by the international left. Support at home, however, proved more complicated. Abd el-Krim had to use all of his considerable persuasive skills coupled with force to induce the various Rifian groups to support his campaign. Those efforts eventually resulted in the establishment of the Al-Jumhūriyyah al-Rīf (Republic of the Rif) in February 1923. In deference to the spirit of the times, he called himself “president” of the Republic of the Rif’s “cabinet,” which was composed primarily of his relatives and close allies. His followers, on the other hand, referred to him by the more-traditional term of mujāhid (“war leader”).

By 1922 the Spanish had taken back nearly all the territory that they had lost in 1921, but, given the cost and the unpopularity in Spain of the war, most offensive operations were put on hold. Consequently, the war remained stalemated through late 1924, when Gen. Miguel Primo de Rivera, who had taken control of the Spanish government by means of a military coup d’état in September 1923, elected to pursue peace negotiations with Abd el-Krim while simultaneously withdrawing Spanish forces from the western part of the protectorate. Neither one of those initiatives was successful, as Abd el-Krim rejected any agreement that did not recognize the full sovereignty of the Rif and very quickly rushed his forces into the vacuum created by the retreat. At the apex of his power in early 1925, Abd el-Krim controlled almost three-quarters of the Spanish protectorate. In the process he replaced a hierarchical society with a centralized bureaucracy and fighting force, a Muslim legal code, international trade arrangements, and a nascent network of roads and telecommunications.

Abd el-Krim’s next step was to move his forces across the frontier into the French protectorate to safeguard his supply lines and important sources of foodstuffs. In that instance, his Riffian fighters were as successful against the French as they had been against the Spanish, overrunning dozens of frontline positions, exacting some 6,200 French casualties, and endangering the important urban centres of Fès and Taza. That success, however, ultimately doomed the Rifian cause, as it brought together the two colonial powers in an alliance to put down the uprising. After careful preparation and coordination, a joint offensive was launched in September 1925, with the Spanish landing some 18,000 troops at Alhucemas Bay and the French inserting some 20,000 troops into the Spanish protectorate from the south. Abd el-Krim’s forces numbered at most 13,000 men.

Rifian resistance was determined and fierce but ultimately unsuccessful in the face of overwhelming manpower and the latest in military technology. By the spring of 1926 Abd el-Krim’s movement was a spent force, and on May 27, 1926, he and his family surrendered, significantly, to the French rather than to the Spanish.

Exile and after

The French removed Abd el-Krim, his brother, his uncle, and their families to Fès and then to Casablanca, where they boarded a ship to Marseilles. On September 2, 1926, the ship sailed for Réunion Island, an isolated French outpost in the Indian Ocean, east of Madagascar. There Abd el-Krim and his extended family would remain in gilded exile for the following 20 years. Finally, in 1947 the French acceded to Abd el-Krim’s petition that he and his family be relocated to France for health reasons and for the education of the extended family’s children. Although the French plan was to move the group to the south of France, that arrangement was derailed by a band of Moroccan nationalists who took Abd el-Krim’s family—apparently against their wishes—from their ship in Port Said, Egypt, and spirited them to Cairo, where King Farouk offered them asylum.

In Egypt Abd el-Krim associated himself with the Liberation Committee of the Arab West (Magreb) until he broke with that group in the early 1950s. He continued to give interviews and to write articles for Arab consumption against European colonialism and for the liberation of North Africa. Even after Morocco’s independence in 1956, despite the pleas of Kings Muhammad V and Hassan II and various Moroccan politicians, Abd el-Krim refused to return to Morocco, giving as his rationale that he would not go back until there was no longer a French and Spanish military presence in the country.